This is Women Road warriors with Shelly Johnson and Kathy Tucaro.
Speaker AFrom the corporate office to the cab of a truck, they're here to inspire and empower women in all professions.
Speaker ASo gear down, sit back and enjoy.
Speaker BWelcome.
Speaker BWe're an award winning show dedicated to empowering women in every profession through inspiring stories and expert insights.
Speaker BNo topics off limits on our show, we power women on the road to success with expert and celebrity interviews and information you need.
Speaker BI'm Shelley.
Speaker AAnd I'm Kathy.
Speaker BLaughter is healthy and our world needs more of it.
Speaker BToday we're bringing you a guest whose comedy courage and cosmic wisdom are impacting audiences all over the world.
Speaker BMonique Marvez isn't just a trailblazing comedian.
Speaker BShe's a truth teller, a storyteller, and a spiritual spark plug.
Speaker BWrapped in razor sharp wit, she offers clever anecdotes on the absurdities of everyday situations.
Speaker BShe's the rare kind of performer who can make you laugh until you can't breathe and then leave you thinking about what she said for days.
Speaker BMonique has starred in multiple Showtime specials and been on HBO Max.
Speaker BAnd she has 190 million views on TikTok.
Speaker BShe also has 70 million views just on Dry Bar comedy.
Speaker BShe's captivating an entire new generation of young women who see her as their comedic Yoda.
Speaker BShe's also a 20 year broadcast veteran, author, podcaster, and a woman who's built an entire philosophy around using laughter as a Trojan horse for truth.
Speaker BMonique inspires audiences of all ages, but especially Gen Z women who flock to her comedy because they sense what we sense.
Speaker BMonique is real.
Speaker BShe's warm, she's wise, and she's absolutely fearless.
Speaker BAnd she's with us on our show today.
Speaker BWelcome back, Monique.
Speaker BThank you for being with us again.
Speaker BI'm so happy.
Speaker AI feel the same way, except that I feel like that intro, like, don't oversell me, you know what I mean?
Speaker AI'd rather come in low and over deliver, but thank you.
Speaker AIt was a great intro.
Speaker AOh, come on, you're awesome.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BYou deserve every bit of it.
Speaker BMonique.
Speaker BOh, my goodness, thank you.
Speaker BYou have been so busy.
Speaker BI mean, you're making an international statement.
Speaker BI mean, you're all over the place.
Speaker BSo what's been happening since the last time we chatted?
Speaker AWell, you lovely ladies entered my life when Dry Bar was released and started to go viral.
Speaker AA slow climb.
Speaker ALittle did we know that the momentum, sort of, you know, social media platforms, all passing the Monique Baton back and forth.
Speaker AI actually ended up with 190 million views on TikTok.
Speaker A70 million views on Drybar.
Speaker AI have several on my Instagram, several posts that have just climbed instantly to 30, you know, 3.5 million, 2 million, 5.7 million on Instagram.
Speaker AAnd it's kind of, it's interesting.
Speaker AThis is the way a friend of mine said it to me years ago.
Speaker AHe said, monique, you've been stacking kindling for 30 years.
Speaker AWhen the divine match hits that pile, it's going to create a blaze and you're going to light the world.
Speaker AAnd that was one of the nicest things anybody ever said to me in my life.
Speaker AIt was my old radio partner Greg Sims.
Speaker AAnd you know, for a few years now, I've seen sort of, let's call it a hand shaped cloud in the sky potentially holding a match.
Speaker AAnd I believe that that pile is starting to be set ablaze.
Speaker BWell, you've got such a wonderful philosophy and I think you're able to incorporate all of that into humor.
Speaker BAnd I mean, it's a natural talent.
Speaker BAnd you've been doing it pretty much all your life, haven't you?
Speaker AAll my adult life.
Speaker AI started open miking at 27.
Speaker AI quit my day job at 30, just shy of my 31st birthday.
Speaker AAnd I, I've not, you know, my entire adult life.
Speaker AI have been, I tell people, I've been living by my wits, quite literally for three decades.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker AFor over three decades.
Speaker BAnd to do that, stand up comedians, there are not a lot of women doing that.
Speaker BAnd I mean, you are really making headlines, which is just marvelous.
Speaker BI mean, you're a serious trailblazer.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AWell, what I'm thrilled about is that I'm doing it now.
Speaker ALike, I didn't do it at 35 and I'm sort of the, you know, Al Bundy of comedy.
Speaker ALooking back at the heyday of the 90s when I was on TV or I was a star or I, you know, I'm like, oh, I've been able to do this and make a nice living and enjoy myself and, and now, you know, in my sixth decade on the planet, I'm getting stopped in airports and recognized in Disneyland.
Speaker AAnd I mean, Sunday morning, Saturday morning, I was in a hotel in Nevada City, California, which is a quaint, adorable town.
Speaker AI had no idea how precious it was.
Speaker AAnd I'm in this old, the oldest hotel west of the Mississippi, continuously running Hotel the National.
Speaker ASo I'm in this old beautiful hotel in my pajamas in a tiny town drinking a cup of coffee with a friend of mine.
Speaker AAnd a woman is like talking to her husband under her breath, going, yeah, that's her.
Speaker AAnd then she finally walked over, and, I mean, I'm in pajamas, looking like a Korean man in drag.
Speaker AI send all of your videos to my daughters.
Speaker AYou know, I think they're life lessons and tutorials on how to have happy relationships.
Speaker AAnd I think, I can't believe you're here.
Speaker AAnd I'm thinking, I can't believe you're here.
Speaker ALike, I would have combed my hair.
Speaker AAnd then I had a wonderful conversation with her and her husband.
Speaker AAnd it was just the fact that I.
Speaker AThere's five people in the room.
Speaker AMe, my friend, the guy serving the coffee, and these two other people, and they're huge fans of mine.
Speaker ALongstanding fans.
Speaker BYou know, you've arrived when you can maybe sign autographs in your pajamas.
Speaker CThat's awesome.
Speaker BYeah, it's kind of like.
Speaker BKind of like Hugh Hefner.
Speaker BI mean.
Speaker AYeah, the smoking Jacket.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker BWell, I think what people love about you is your perspective.
Speaker BIt's spot on.
Speaker BYou're delightfully irreverent.
Speaker BMicro.
Speaker CThat's well said.
Speaker AI'm going to tell my mom to use that next time.
Speaker AI'm like, hey, don't say it like this when you're not happy with me.
Speaker ASay it like this.
Speaker BMy first experience watching you was your routine on, you'll never be able to change a man.
Speaker BI mean, it was great, and it was so true.
Speaker BAnd you have men coming, too.
Speaker BAnd they loved it.
Speaker AThey love it more.
Speaker AThey love it.
Speaker AThey feel recognized.
Speaker ALike, oh, my goodness.
Speaker ASomeone who understands that I'm going to stay like this.
Speaker AAnd for me, it's not a bad thing.
Speaker AI like me.
Speaker AI like you, too.
Speaker BWell, you know what?
Speaker BIt's funny.
Speaker BIt was a guy who turned me onto that routine.
Speaker BIt's like, you gotta watch this.
Speaker BI mean, I'm like, wow, she's funny.
Speaker BWe gotta have her on the show.
Speaker BThis is great.
Speaker CThank you.
Speaker AOh, they're begging me to write books.
Speaker AI have dudes saying, like, you need to put this, you know, down so they can see it all the time.
Speaker BSo why do you think Humor, you know, when people come to hear somebody and they laugh, I think that there's a sense of relief.
Speaker BWhat is it about laughter that is so healthy for us?
Speaker AI had a doctor tell me one time, a do.
Speaker AA doctor, physician.
Speaker AHe said, it's impossible to think a negative thought while you're laughing.
Speaker AThe act of laughter, like a sneeze, is powerful.
Speaker AIt short circuits the brain.
Speaker AIt's literally a microscopic hard reset.
Speaker ASo you know that being Said it makes perfect sense that I would be a comedian because my dad was, you know, manic depressive.
Speaker AI mean, now they call it bipolar.
Speaker AMy dad was manic depressive, and I kind of honed my skills as a child.
Speaker AWhen I could see that my dad was blue, I would put on little pantomimes and shows in the living room to make him laugh and cheer him up.
Speaker AAnd inevitably, if I timed it right, I could turn it around.
Speaker ALike, I could halt the slide.
Speaker BThat's amazing.
Speaker BSo you were actually.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker BI mean, as a child, for you to sense all of those things, you knew what he needed.
Speaker AAbsolutely.
Speaker AI say that about everyone.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BI mean, so that really did give you a skill set to be able to see how he responded.
Speaker BBecause when you're up on stage, you rely on the audience feedback energetically.
Speaker AYeah, I can feel him.
Speaker AMm.
Speaker BI mean, that's a natural talent.
Speaker BI mean, I'm sure there are a lot of people saying, gee, I'd love to do stand up.
Speaker BBut, I mean, there are a lot of skills you have to have or at least use.
Speaker AI believe that everyone, if they chose to, would have an extra element of understanding other people.
Speaker AI believe that.
Speaker AI mean, supposedly the biblical story of the Tower of Babel is that originally we didn't need language because everybody understood everybody.
Speaker AThere was telepathy, and that language, in a way, created a way to hide from one another, having separate languages and different languages.
Speaker ABut I believe everybody, on some level, if they chose to, could feel and relate to people close to them, or maybe even far away, but for sure, close to them, differently than just depending on a conversation or a gesture or a facial expression.
Speaker AI believe that with all my heart.
Speaker AI just use it and hone it, and it's a muscle.
Speaker AThe more I do it, the better I get at it.
Speaker BYou have empathy, which I think a lot of people have not really been developing.
Speaker BYou know, especially with social media, I think we're kind of lacking that.
Speaker AWell, I think it's going in the opposite direction.
Speaker AI think it's perfecting people's skills of a negative form of objectivity, of a corrosive turning inward and thinking that it's all about you.
Speaker BOh.
Speaker BOh, my goodness.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BIt's turning people into a bunch of little narcissists in many ways.
Speaker BI mean, I've kind of.
Speaker BWell, like Facebook, I used to call it my face.
Speaker AYeah, absolutely.
Speaker BIt's like, look at me, look at me.
Speaker BBy the way, look at my plate.
Speaker BYou know, before social media, how many people ran around showing each other.
Speaker BTheir plates, their food.
Speaker ATheir food.
Speaker AI'm gonna tell you right now, I don't give a rat's patootie about your cat.
Speaker AI don't care what you ate for dinner.
Speaker AYou know, I wanna know what makes you tick and if your food is what makes you tick.
Speaker AYou're a chef.
Speaker AI've got a beloved friend who's a chef.
Speaker AAnd, you know, that's different.
Speaker AThat's different.
Speaker ABut just randomly.
Speaker AI ate at Chuck Jones barbecue and this is what my brisket looked like.
Speaker ALike, that's a good use of your time.
Speaker AJust enjoy the brisket.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker AStay tuned for more of Women Road warriors.
Speaker AComing up.
Speaker BIndustry movement Trucking moves America Forward is telling the story of the industry.
Speaker BOur safety champions, the women of trucking, independent contractors, the next generation of truckers, and more.
Speaker BHelp us promote the best of our industry.
Speaker BShare your story and what you love about trucking.
Speaker BShare images of a moment you're proud of and join us on social media.
Speaker BLearn more at truckingmovesamerica.com.
Speaker AWelcome back.
Speaker AWelcome back to Women Road warriors with Shelly Johnson and Kathy Tucaro.
Speaker BIf you're enjoying this informative episode of Women Road Warriors, I wanted to mention Kathy and I explore all kinds of topics that will power you on the road to success.
Speaker BWe feature a lot of expert interviews, plus we feature celebrities and women who've been trailblazers.
Speaker BPlease check out our podcast@womenroadwarriors.com and click on our Episodes page.
Speaker BWe're also available wherever you listen to podcasts on all the major podcast channels like Spotify, Apple, YouTube, Amazon, Music, Audible, you name it.
Speaker BCheck us out and bookmark our podcast.
Speaker BAlso, don't forget to follow us on social media.
Speaker BWe're on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, LinkedIn, YouTube, and other sites and tell others about us.
Speaker BWe want to help as many women as possible.
Speaker BIf you've ever needed proof that laughter really is medicine, today's conversation delivers it.
Speaker BOur world could use a whole lot more humor today, and our guest lives that truth every day.
Speaker BMonique Marvez is the kind of comedian who makes you laugh hard and then quietly changes the way you see the world.
Speaker BWith millions of views across Showtime, hbo, Max, Dry bar, comedy, and social media channels like TikTok, Monique uses humor as a Trojan horse for truth, and she's doing it fearlessly.
Speaker BMonique, do you think that laughter and humor, is that gonna be maybe the prescription for a better humanity?
Speaker BIf we can all maybe get together and stop being so serious and divisive and just loosen up and Laugh, damn it.
Speaker AExactly.
Speaker AThis year has been the best year of my life, end of story.
Speaker AThe best by far, for so many reasons.
Speaker ABut I think part of it is because I've reached the pinnacle of trusting myself and knowing that I got it right, that I.
Speaker AThat I did most of it better than I even thought I'd done it until I can look back, because I played such a long game that at different points, I wasn't.
Speaker AYou know, I was down a few points.
Speaker AI didn't.
Speaker AI didn't know that I was going to make it up.
Speaker AI mean, I'm not saying my life has been, you know, the.
Speaker AThe famous Heidi game where the Raiders came back from.
Speaker AI don't know if you're familiar with that analogy, but it's a very funny analogy, which is back in the day, you know, even if a football game was being played, if it was time for, you know, the Wonderful World of Disney or whatever, they would just.
Speaker AThe game would be done, as opposed to.
Speaker ABecause of the Heidi game is where they now say, we will get back to our regularly, you know, scheduled programming after the game, because I believe it was.
Speaker AThe Oakland Raiders were, like, down by, you know, four touchdowns or something.
Speaker AAnd then they cut to the.
Speaker ATo the movie Heidi, and they came back from behind and they scored like.
Speaker ALike four touchdowns and a field goal.
Speaker ALike, I'm exaggerating, but it was that enormous, and the fans missed all of it because of Heidi.
Speaker ASo it's.
Speaker AIt's referred to as the Heidi game.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd in a weird way, my life, you know, at different points, at different parts of my life, it looked like I was three touchdowns back, you know, but, you know, you cut to something else, and then when you're looking back again, you're like, oh, my goodness, I'm winning.
Speaker BWell, hindsight's always 20 20, and I think when we're in the.
Speaker BIn the thick of something, we're not sure if we're going to get through it.
Speaker BAnd then we really are.
Speaker BWe're like, whew, glad that's over with.
Speaker BAnd, wow, it wasn't as hard as I thought it was.
Speaker BAnd then.
Speaker AOr it didn't leave as many mark and probably was harder than I remember, but I.
Speaker ABecause we don't remember it the way it happened, but it didn't leave any mark.
Speaker AI'm good.
Speaker BExactly.
Speaker BAnd, you know, a lot of times, some of the toughest things we go through, we can stand back and laugh at it.
Speaker AThey're my favorites.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd we can laugh at ourselves.
Speaker BI think people have Become so serious and so hard on themselves.
Speaker BThey can't mean serious.
Speaker AIsn't it?
Speaker AI don't mind serious people.
Speaker AI don't mind academics.
Speaker AI don't even mind people with no sense of humor.
Speaker AI was raised by, well, like my grandmother.
Speaker AHer name was Pierce Snows in Spanish, Pura Nieves.
Speaker AShe had zero sense of humor.
Speaker AMy grandfather used to tell her jokes just to watch her not get them.
Speaker AThat just made him enjoy it more.
Speaker AI just think that we've normalized over 25 years of, you know, reality shows.
Speaker AWhen I was a kid were Alan Funt, you know, Candid Camera.
Speaker AYou made somebody look silly.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AYou know, it wasn't a big deal.
Speaker AAnd then.
Speaker AAnd then we got Survivor and it just kept going.
Speaker AAnd Love island and Temptation island and the Bachelor and the golden bachelor and the 3/4 dead bachelor, whatever.
Speaker AAnd we just keep going.
Speaker AAnd, you know, even if you go back to the Apprentice, how did it become a good show that at the end of the show somebody says, you're fired?
Speaker ALike, how is that a show?
Speaker AThat's you're the weakest link.
Speaker AYou've been voted off.
Speaker ALike, how did we as a society come to enjoy people hearing the, you know, like, the only worse thing than you've been fired is you're dead or you're evicted.
Speaker ALike, why is.
Speaker AWhy is that good?
Speaker BYeah, it seems kind of sadistic.
Speaker AIt's Roman Circus.
Speaker AIt's Roman Circus.
Speaker AThumbs up, thumbs down.
Speaker AI don't like it.
Speaker AI don't watch any of those shows, and I don't promulgate them in any way other than to say, not my cup of tea.
Speaker ABecause if it makes you happy, but you gotta ask yourself, why?
Speaker ASo that you can say like, whew, there but for the grace of God go, I glad it's that guy and not me.
Speaker AThat's not a good way to think.
Speaker BNo, no.
Speaker AMy thought is, how do I help that guy?
Speaker ALook what just happened to him.
Speaker AWhat can I do?
Speaker BAnd that's the way it should be.
Speaker BThat's the way people should be thinking.
Speaker BBut I think you're right.
Speaker BWe've really shifted.
Speaker BAnd when people maybe could get out of that serious mindset, and I think what you do is you bring the human.
Speaker BI mean, everything you talk about, it's funny.
Speaker BBut you have a life lesson there.
Speaker BAnd I think people can walk away and go, you know, she's right.
Speaker BAnd maybe they'll rethink what they're doing.
Speaker BSo, I mean, it's a positive chain reaction.
Speaker AWell, I think God was kind in waiting till I was relatively not young to hand me this success because people know that I'm not being a hypocrite.
Speaker AIf you go through my life, you know, you're not gonna read a Wikipedia post.
Speaker AIn fact, the first time somebody aied me and said like, you know, Monique, I mean, it was early days of ChatGPT.
Speaker AI'll never forget it.
Speaker AI got an email from my friend Melissa Greenberg and she said, I asked ChatGPT about you and I remember it.
Speaker AI've read it so many times.
Speaker AI don't know it by memory, but it was like, ah comma, Monique Marvez.
Speaker ANow you're talking about a great comedian period.
Speaker AAnd it was about a two paragraph love letter of how I've worked hard and I've been in the game a long time.
Speaker AAnd this was long before, you know, TikTok or, or Dry bar or, you know, and it, it just, basically it was, I said, this is Ivory Snow.
Speaker AThis is, you know, Ivory soap.
Speaker A99.4% pure.
Speaker ALike, at no time to say there was a controversy where someone accused her of stealing material or, you know, there people claim that her career was helped by sleeping with so and so TV executive.
Speaker ALike, all it was was, this chick works hard, she says good things, she tries to help others.
Speaker AOh, and she happens to be unbelievably hilarious.
Speaker AAnd I cried.
Speaker AI read the email she sent me, I read the bio that GBT chat, and I sat in a hotel room in Vegas and cried and said, this is a life well lived.
Speaker AThis is a life well lived and kudos to me.
Speaker AYou know, it was a big day.
Speaker BThat's so awesome.
Speaker BThat is.
Speaker BWow.
Speaker AEverything else is a bonus.
Speaker AThe fact that the Internet machine, even the Internet machine could only give me love and positive, like, praise.
Speaker ALike, yeah, this, this chick's crushing it.
Speaker AAnd she's crushing it with kindness and helping other people journey to a better place while she's going there.
Speaker AStay tuned for more of women Road warriors coming up.
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Speaker BIndustry movement Trucking Moves America Forward is telling the story of the industry.
Speaker BOur safety champions, the women of trucking, independent contractors, the next generation of truckers and more.
Speaker BHelp us promote the best of our industry.
Speaker BShare your story and what you love about trucking.
Speaker BShare images of a moment you're proud of and join us on social media.
Speaker BLearn more at truckingmovesamerica.com.
Speaker AWelcome back welcome back to Women Road warriors with Shelly Johnson and Kathy Tucaro.
Speaker BThere's comedy that entertains and then there's comedy that connects.
Speaker BMonique Marvez does both.
Speaker BShe's a trailblazing comic, a storyteller, and a truth teller who blends razor sharp wit with warmth and Wisdom.
Speaker BWith over 200 million views online, she's become a kind of comedic yoda for for a new generation of women who crave authenticity.
Speaker BMonique doesn't just make you laugh.
Speaker BShe makes you think, feel, and see yourself more clearly.
Speaker BShe's been discussing the importance of humor and how many of us have lost some of that ability.
Speaker BHumor is something that we really need today.
Speaker BPlus it's healthy and it's human.
Speaker BWe've been exploring Monique's incredible insights and her positive spin on humor that helps people journey to a better place.
Speaker BChatGPT's even impressed with her with some serious kudos and a review of what she's been doing.
Speaker BMonique, you know, you've arrived and you're making some serious waves.
Speaker BIf ChatGPT can see your impact when you can impress ChatGPT, I don't think a lot of people can say that.
Speaker AI cried.
Speaker AI sat in bed in a hotel room in Vegas and cried when I read what?
Speaker AWhat the.
Speaker ABecause all AI is is machine learning.
Speaker AIt goes out and reads every single thing that's ever been written.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker AAnd, and the beauty was at the end it said, this is all I know about Monique Marvez as of my most recent update.
Speaker AAnd this was a while ago, so it was like September of 2021.
Speaker AHowever, we, you know, based on blah, blah, we expect great things ahead for her.
Speaker AI think that's the part that made me cry because I'm reading this and I'm like 50 something years old, you know.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker CWow.
Speaker BWell, you know, you have done so many different things and I think getting a later start as a comedian, you've got life experience.
Speaker AOh yeah.
Speaker AI told people what got me smacked.
Speaker CLots of it.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhat got me smacked, divorced and fired is now paying my rent.
Speaker BBut you know, you can take that experience.
Speaker BAnd you can make it funny and you can make it a life lesson too, for the audience.
Speaker BAnd I think that the people are sensing the fact you give back.
Speaker BAnd you have that sense if humanity and you're relatable, which that's, I think, what everyone's craving because we seem to be lacking that today.
Speaker AWell, I think that's why I'm glad that I'm not a child and that when people look at me and I could lie to you, you're my friends and you know, you would, you would just push back and go like, come on, Monique.
Speaker ABut the truth is, like, when I'm standing on stage, I enjoy saying my age because I don't look at at all.
Speaker AI'm physically fit, stronger than I've been in my whole life.
Speaker AJust did a hot yoga class this morning and did a lot of chaturangas, my friend.
Speaker AI did not puss out and do child pose when I could have.
Speaker ABut the point I'm making is that I'm not telling you anything.
Speaker AI'm showing you.
Speaker ADo you want to be happy?
Speaker ADo you want to have a face free of a bunch of frown lines and wrinkles, but not all smooth, that you can show a movie on your forehead because you've botoxed away your innards?
Speaker AAnd you know, I can tell you when people say, like, what's your secret?
Speaker AYou look great.
Speaker AOr your energy is greater, your frequency or your vibe, you know my secret?
Speaker AHave faith in myself, have faith in my fellow man.
Speaker AAnd have faith something bigger than me.
Speaker AJust believing in the goodness of the order of things is better than any beauty product or protocol you can follow.
Speaker BAnd I would think that it comes out.
Speaker BAnd you're so right.
Speaker BA lot of people, they're so worried about all the day to day stuff, the things that don't matter, I mean, they just worry, worry, worry.
Speaker BAnd then of course, they look in the mirror and they hate what they see because they're paying attention to the messages of what you're supposed to look like and what you're supposed to act like.
Speaker BThey forget who they are, they forget the humanity and they forget the reason we're on this earth.
Speaker BAnd because there's so much to enjoy and there's no dollar amount that you can put on that.
Speaker ANo, when you.
Speaker AIt's really that simple.
Speaker AFind things that make you happy.
Speaker AIf you want to scroll socials, the bottom line is if all you do is heart kitten videos of kittens riding Roombas, then eventually the algorithm will think, oh, she likes kittens.
Speaker AWriting Roombas.
Speaker ALet's send her baby deer bathing in, you know, whatever.
Speaker AIf you scroll through my socials, the algorithm now knows Monique likes, you know, butt workouts.
Speaker ABecause you get older, you got to work extra hard to keep the cheeks high.
Speaker AWhat does Monique like?
Speaker ADogs, butt workouts and vintage dancing.
Speaker AI love old dancing videos where they take and they mash up old dance routines with modern music.
Speaker ALike, what do I like?
Speaker AI like old Hollywood.
Speaker AI like dancing.
Speaker AI like dogs.
Speaker AI like butt workouts.
Speaker ALike that.
Speaker AThe algorithm now sends me all kinds of that.
Speaker BWell, but that's what you enjoy.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI don't get politics.
Speaker AI don't get recipes.
Speaker AYou know, I do get a lot of refinished furniture.
Speaker AI do get a lot of.
Speaker AI like that.
Speaker AI like watching people take old banged up stuff and make it pretty.
Speaker AI enjoy that.
Speaker BWell, and of course, they're restoring history.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker BYou know, and the history of the people who sat in those chairs.
Speaker AI love vintage thrift.
Speaker AYeah, but that.
Speaker AThat's.
Speaker AThat's what the algorithm sends me.
Speaker AThe algorithm sends me, you know, upcycling, dogs, dancing, golden age of Hollywood.
Speaker ALike, it makes me happy.
Speaker AIf social media is not making you happy, you're using it wrong.
Speaker AYou're getting into virtual fights with idiots and bots, and you're voicing opinions that nobody needs to know outside of your house.
Speaker AYou know, like, get smart about it.
Speaker ATurn it around.
Speaker AUse it.
Speaker BYeah, and you're so right.
Speaker BI mean, people are picking fights over everything.
Speaker AAnd you see, and the algorithm loves that.
Speaker AIt leans into it.
Speaker AIf you give it the tiniest opportunity to create conflict or controversy, it will do it, because that's what keeps people stuck.
Speaker AAnd the whole goal of social media is to keep you stuck to it.
Speaker AThat's its job.
Speaker BYeah, that's true.
Speaker BSo if everybody changed that trajectory, if you will, and leaned into humor and Cathy, what would the Internet look like?
Speaker BWouldn't that be.
Speaker AIt would be a lot of cats on roombas.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker ALike, or recipes, if that's what you like.
Speaker AOr being a vegan.
Speaker AIt would be about.
Speaker AYou want me to tell you what it would look like?
Speaker ACollaboration, community, support, Faith in.
Speaker AIn your fellow man, helping a neighbor, raising a barn, pooling resources after a fire.
Speaker AThat's what it would look like, and.
Speaker BThat'S what it's supposed to be.
Speaker BAnd, you know, around the holidays, people think that way, but then I think they kind of migrate away from it and they go back to the old way of doing things.
Speaker BI mean, human beings have to be Reminded.
Speaker BAnd I think once they have that kind of collaboration and they're focused and leaning into more, the happy, they're going to like more people.
Speaker BIt's gotta be a snowball effect.
Speaker BAnd they're going to want to participate and they're going to want to do things for other people.
Speaker AIt's an upwards spiral.
Speaker AYou know, when I worked with John Gray on Mars, Venus Live, one of the things I really understood, and I knew this before, but there is no stasis on a physical plane.
Speaker AThat's not Jesus or that's physics.
Speaker AThere is no stasis on a physical plane.
Speaker AEverything's changing all the time.
Speaker AIt's just the nature of Earth, right?
Speaker ABut then John Gray was telling me that within relationship, being the Mars Venus guy and the relationship guru, that they're.
Speaker AWithin relationships, you're either ascending or descending.
Speaker ANow he's talking about romantic.
Speaker AI mean, Mars, Venus, he was a marriage counselor.
Speaker ABut in every single relationship you have in your life, you're either ascending, you're becoming better people together, or descending, you're going shop.
Speaker AThat's your friend you go shopping with and buy things you maybe don't need.
Speaker AAnd you love them.
Speaker ABut of course, don't you love the person you go to the casino with or the person you smoke pot with or the person you drink with or of course you love those people because they're fun and you do fun things, but they're not necessarily people that are helping you ascend.
Speaker ABut there is no stasis.
Speaker AYou're not flat.
Speaker AYou're either ascending or descending.
Speaker AAnd I pick people that bring out the things in me that I want to be better.
Speaker AI pick out people that are braver than me and fitter than me and more talented than me and smarter than me.
Speaker AAnd I calm the world for people that I believe are.
Speaker AWill help me ascend.
Speaker ABecause that to me, is the better basis for a friendship.
Speaker AIt's real easy to find people to smoke and drink with, but boy, when you find somebody that when you walk away from them, you feel better.
Speaker AThat's the money.
Speaker BIt really is.
Speaker BWe interviewed Dr. Gray about his book Beyond Mars and the relationship skills for today's complex world.
Speaker BI mean, he's got some tremendous insight.
Speaker AHe's a great guy.
Speaker AI've worked with him.
Speaker CYeah, it was a really good interview.
Speaker BAnd, you know, you're right.
Speaker BFinding the right people where you can grow.
Speaker BI mean, we come into this world learning and we don't know it all.
Speaker BA lot of people think to themselves, hey, I know it all I've never said that.
Speaker BI've never.
Speaker BI realize there's so much more I can learn, and that's what makes the world exciting.
Speaker CYes.
Speaker BYou know, there's so many things to experience and learning from other people, that's part of the collaboration.
Speaker BAnd along with that comes laughter.
Speaker ALook, laughter.
Speaker AI tell people laughter is the salve that keeps reality from scarring.
Speaker AYou're going to fall down in life.
Speaker AYou're going to skin your, you know, your knee, so to speak.
Speaker AThings are going to happen if you can't dust yourself off and laugh, you know, like, that's.
Speaker AYou're gonna have a.
Speaker AIt's not gonna be a good Earth.
Speaker AIs not gonna be a good experience for you.
Speaker BTrue.
Speaker BWell, and then, of course, I wonder, they're saying AI is going to be more and more pervasive and in our lives and so forth, and.
Speaker BI don't know.
Speaker BOne robot that can laugh.
Speaker ANo.
Speaker AWell, you know, look, it's a tool.
Speaker AEverybody's got themselves wrapped around the axle about AI's coming.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker ASo did the Gutenberg Bible, you know, so did the printing press.
Speaker ASo did the steam engine.
Speaker ASo did the radio.
Speaker ASo did the telephone.
Speaker ASo did fiber optic.
Speaker ASo did, you know, like, stop me whenever you want.
Speaker ABut it's a tool.
Speaker AIt's not here to ruin your life.
Speaker ALike, yes.
Speaker AWhen Henry Ford event invented the assembly line, a lot of people lost their jobs because cars used to be made.
Speaker A20 guys on one car, you know, I mean, and then the assembly line changed that, you know, and the model T. Well, okay, well, that wasn't very fun.
Speaker AOr, you know, when all of a sudden trains could take you anywhere and you didn't need.
Speaker AEvery single person had their own horse and their own this and their own that.
Speaker AI mean, people don't realize people didn't want trains.
Speaker AQueen Victoria had to popularize trains in England because the.
Speaker AThe landed gentry didn't want the hoi polloi being able to jump on a train and come out to their neighborhood.
Speaker BWell, they also said that women's uteruses would fall out or something if they were in a vehicle that went too fast.
Speaker AYou know what it takes to make your uterus fall out?
Speaker BRidiculous.
Speaker AIs that.
Speaker AI mean, I personally couldn't answer that question if you said no.
Speaker AWhat does it take for a uterus to fall out?
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker AI don't know.
Speaker AI wouldn't even know how to Google that.
Speaker BYeah, it'd be interesting to see what ChatGPT would do.
Speaker AYeah, because it's like you could say what event or what, you know, what health.
Speaker AI mean, there's a lot of ways that that could happen, right?
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BPeople are afraid of change and people.
Speaker AAre afraid of the loss of control.
Speaker AAnd it's such a childish, childish, specious argument to think that you have control over anything ever.
Speaker AYou have control over your reactions, you have control over your attitude, but one day you're going to wake up and somebody you love is alive and when you go to bed that night, they're going to be dead.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AAnd that's, you know, that's the ultimate loss of control.
Speaker BYes, it is.
Speaker BAnd human beings do not react well to that.
Speaker ANo, we do not.
Speaker BWe are control freaks.
Speaker BAnd maybe that's where laughter breaks us out of that.
Speaker BI mean, I really do think that laughter and humor are probably some of the most important emotions or healthiest that we could have to deal with.
Speaker AStress, it's like compressed love when you laugh.
Speaker AIt's that instant feeling and even chemical what you release when you laugh.
Speaker AAnd oxytocin, it's literally like a tiny little, like a little splash of sprinkly, glittery love in your face when you laugh.
Speaker ABecause it's the best of every part of being a human.
Speaker BIt is.
Speaker AStay tuned for more of Women Road warriors coming up.
Speaker BIndustry movement Trucking Moves America Forward is telling the story of the industry.
Speaker BOur safety champions, the women of trucking, Independent contract, the next generation of truckers and more.
Speaker BHelp us promote the best of our industry.
Speaker BShare your story and what you love about trucking.
Speaker BShare images of a moment you're proud of and join us on social media.
Speaker BLearn more at truckingmovesamerica.com.
Speaker AWelcome back to Women Road warriors with Shelly Johnson.
Speaker AThat's Kathy Tucaro.
Speaker BLaughter is powerful and today's guest has turned it into a movement.
Speaker BMonique Marvez has built an entire philosophy around using humor to crack open conversations we don't always know how to have a 20 year broadcast.
Speaker BVeteran, author, podcaster, and comedy force of nature, she captivates audiences across generations, especially Gen Z women who recognize real when they hear it.
Speaker BMonique's fearless, insightful and wildly funny.
Speaker BShe has a fantastic perspective on life that's propelled her to success.
Speaker BShe knows how important laughter is for all of us.
Speaker BShe also believes that people need to have faith in themselves, have faith in their fellow man and faith in something bigger than themselves.
Speaker BIt's better than any beauty product or protocol you can follow.
Speaker BLike she says, to find things that make you happy and engage in positive social media.
Speaker BThat's collaboration, community support.
Speaker BAnd helping others, not that negative stuff.
Speaker BAlso pick people to hang out with that will make you better and ascend as a person and laugh.
Speaker BLike Monique says, it's like compressed love that's released when you laugh.
Speaker BThat's a powerful perspective.
Speaker BWell, Kathy, you enjoy a good joke and certainly you've always been very much into laughter and all of that, haven't you?
Speaker CWell, yeah.
Speaker CGrowing up in an extremely difficult situation.
Speaker CLife.
Speaker CLife situation.
Speaker CMy mom is the one that got us going, raising us three girls.
Speaker CI mean, we were so poor.
Speaker COur toaster literally was a wire hanger folded in half right on the stove.
Speaker CBut anyway, so life was tough.
Speaker CAnd I remember walking down the street with her one day and she.
Speaker CWe were looking at this lady, she was just really old and crispy and so full of wrinkles.
Speaker CAnd her face, like her mouth was down in a frown and just so miserable and tight.
Speaker CAnd my mom elbowed me so hard in the side and she says, if you don't learn to laugh at life, you're gonna look just like that.
Speaker CAnd she says you need to be able to, no matter what it is, to smile and make.
Speaker CTurn it up, turn it around, right?
Speaker BAnd it's.
Speaker CIt's the best thing that she could have ever taught me because life would have.
Speaker CWell, life has been really rough.
Speaker CBut honestly, laughter really, truly is the best medicine.
Speaker CAnd I'll give you another example of that.
Speaker CHere at work, we work 13 hour shifts.
Speaker CLike right now, I'm here for three weeks and I'm on night shift.
Speaker CI will not see the sun for three weeks.
Speaker AWhere are you?
Speaker CI'm in northern Canada right now.
Speaker AAs we learned in radio, there could be a person who does not know I know your lunatic job.
Speaker ABut there could be a first time listener because I'm going to share this.
Speaker ASo my fans could be coming to Road Warriors.
Speaker ASo if you'd be kind enough to tell potentially one of my fans and a first time listener what your lunatic job is so they can.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CI operate the largest mining equipment in the world.
Speaker CLike right now, like a truck that I drive is literally two and a half stories high.
Speaker CWhen the box is up, when we dump a load of 400 tons, it's five stories high.
Speaker CSo the tires are 14ft tall.
Speaker CI drive a building.
Speaker CIt is crazy, crazy big.
Speaker CThe grader I operate that I've been on for the last week and a half is bigger than a highway tractor trailer.
Speaker CWhen the flat deck comes in the mine hauling pipe or whatever pieces of equipment, I'm actually looking down at the driver My dozer is bigger than a double car garage.
Speaker CAnd yeah, it's wicked.
Speaker CAnd I work for ExxonMobil and we work in an open pit mine in the oil sands in northern Alberta.
Speaker CAnd yeah, so right now, what I was saying is that we're on night shift.
Speaker CThese 12 and a half hour night shifts.
Speaker CAnd the only thing that really keeps our sanity, because right now we have 81 autonomous trucks.
Speaker CIt's all robots, no people driving.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CAnd so it's crazy because they go flying by you and I'm not joking, 50 miles an hour.
Speaker BRight.
Speaker CThese robots go fully loaded.
Speaker CAnd so it's scary because, I mean, you got to get out of the way because they don't.
Speaker CLike, they'll stop it.
Speaker ANot really.
Speaker CBut anyway, so these things are flying by and I mean, the stress is high and it's a dangerous job.
Speaker CThe only thing that keeps our sanity is the peanut gallery on the radio, you know, people.
Speaker CPeople jesting each other and, you know, putting, you know, joking and making fun out of.
Speaker AOh, man.
Speaker CLike, Kathy got stuck again.
Speaker CYou know, like, really, Kathy.
Speaker CSo.
Speaker CBut yeah, laughter is what keeps us going.
Speaker AI love that.
Speaker AI was just in Edmonton for the Edmonton Comedy Festival.
Speaker AAnd for.
Speaker AFor.
Speaker AI'm sure the part you're at isn't like the best part, but I love Canada.
Speaker AI always say Canadians are the nicest human beings on earth.
Speaker AAnd thank you.
Speaker AAny chance I get to go to Canada?
Speaker AI always say yes because I do love Canada.
Speaker BI agree with Monique.
Speaker BCanada's great.
Speaker BAnd, you know, it's interesting, Kathy, you're saying that what's really keeping your sanity is laughter and humor.
Speaker CIt is.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo, Monique, what you're talking about and what you're doing, you're promoting sanity when you have that setting.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BAgreed.
Speaker AAgreed.
Speaker CYep.
Speaker CPositive mental health.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BBecause it does seem sometimes that we've got a lot of crazy people out there, and if you can bring them back into something that's a lot more centered and human with laughter and something positive.
Speaker BWhat a wonderful world we have.
Speaker CJust so much negativity around, right?
Speaker BYep.
Speaker CAnd I refuse to live in that dark circle.
Speaker CLike, I just won't.
Speaker CAgreed.
Speaker CMy whole point in life is everywhere I go, I'm going to be that ray of sunshine.
Speaker CI'm going to be making people, someone smile and happy and just, you know.
Speaker CYou know what?
Speaker CI got so much energy right now.
Speaker CYou're getting a hug.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AI'm afraid of what's going to happen if we're ever in the same room.
Speaker AKathy, it's Going to be all kinds of hugging and high fiving and some clogging, maybe some clogging, a jig of some sort.
Speaker AIt's going to get crazy.
Speaker BBut that's what life's about.
Speaker BAnd, you know, that's.
Speaker BThat's what children do, you know?
Speaker BYeah, we forget how to be a kid.
Speaker AAgreed.
Speaker BNot me.
Speaker AI have an annual pass to Disneyland.
Speaker AI could be ridiculously childish, but, you.
Speaker BKnow, you've got a better dial on life.
Speaker BI think you got a handle on that at a very young age, helping your dad.
Speaker AI did.
Speaker AYeah, I did.
Speaker AI feel so blessed that a lot of things that dawn on people like years ago.
Speaker AI remember sometimes I say very irreverent things, as you well know.
Speaker AThere was a whole thing about when I'm old.
Speaker AThere was a poem, when I'm old, I'll wear purple.
Speaker AAnd then it was like a red hat society.
Speaker AAnd then you saw a lot of old ladies going around in purple dresses with red hats.
Speaker AIt's a thing, you know, it was.
Speaker ABecame a thing.
Speaker AI think it was even international, but certainly the United States.
Speaker AAnd, and I used to say, like, you're going to wait till you're old to wear purple and red hats.
Speaker ALike, clearly you're not Puerto Rican.
Speaker AYou're like, we, my people, we do this, like, early on in life.
Speaker AWe, we know all about the bright colors and the just go with it kind of vibe.
Speaker ALike, I jokingly say, yeah, I'll wear a prom dress to go pay my light bill.
Speaker ALike, let's do this.
Speaker BThat's great.
Speaker BBut, you know, that's fun.
Speaker BAnd people may say, wow, you're kind of weird.
Speaker BSo what?
Speaker BSo what?
Speaker BWe're too worried about worrying about what other people think of us.
Speaker AAmen.
Speaker AWhat do you think of you?
Speaker AThat's even my answer with politics.
Speaker AWhen people get all whacked out, I look them dead in the eye and I say, you know what?
Speaker AWorry less about who's in the White House and more about who's in your house.
Speaker AYou're going to be so much happier.
Speaker BOoh, I like that.
Speaker BThat could be a T shirt.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker BI like that.
Speaker BWe do.
Speaker BI mean, it's like, oh, so and so is great to think.
Speaker BAnd I think that we're even.
Speaker BWhat you're seeing with social media, people are worried about everybody else.
Speaker BOh, I need my likes.
Speaker BHey, I didn't get any likes today.
Speaker BWell, so, you know, we didn't worry about that so much until all of this social media frenzy.
Speaker BSo for us to maybe get back to humanity and what we're all about, because I think a lot of people are kind of worried that the world's kind of out of control because people are losing sight of being human.
Speaker AIt doesn't hurt to remind people.
Speaker AAnalog in person.
Speaker AI mean, I. I travel a lot for business, and there's a street that I'm on all the time in Los Angeles called Larchmont.
Speaker AAnd it's an old school, this Larchmont.
Speaker AI was joking to say.
Speaker AI say LA is like the Bible.
Speaker AEverybody thinks the Bible is one big giant thing, and it's not.
Speaker AIt's 44 books.
Speaker ASo I always tell people Los Angeles is a giant group of small neighborhoods kind of, you know, quilted together.
Speaker AAnd there's a neighborhood that I like, Hancock park.
Speaker AAnd it has its own little main street that's two blocks long.
Speaker AAnd I go there every day.
Speaker AMy yoga center's there, my Poke bowl, my dry cleaner.
Speaker AThat's just my happy place.
Speaker AAnd when I've been out of town, I literally just walk down the street, opening up the doors to the little stores and going like, hi, I missed you guys.
Speaker AAnd I, you know, I just feel like it's analog important to let the people know that are in your life, that you're.
Speaker AThat you like them.
Speaker ANot just.
Speaker AI mean, I. I write reviews on things and I do Yelps and I do all that stuff because it does help to support your people on socials.
Speaker AI tell people, if you have a friend and they have a store, don't just take it for granted.
Speaker ATake the time and write them an awesome Yelp review.
Speaker AYou know, that's.
Speaker AThat's the best way you can really help your friend.
Speaker ASo I do all of the online likes and supports and you're.
Speaker AThere's your new grandbaby.
Speaker AAnd I do all of that, but in person, you know, I will.
Speaker AI poke my head into storefronts and high five people walking their dogs and let them know, you're.
Speaker AYou're not random to me.
Speaker AYou make up my life.
Speaker AYou make it better.
Speaker BI like that.
Speaker CI like that, too.
Speaker BI think too many people think other people are random and they need to not think that way.
Speaker AI'm the opposite.
Speaker AI think every.
Speaker AI think the Matrix was a documentary that your life is your own movie that you're creating, that nothing's a coincidence that anybody in your movie is.
Speaker AThat's a quote unquote extra.
Speaker AYou've never met them before.
Speaker AThey're in the background.
Speaker AOkay, but they're in your movie, and it's not random or A coincidence.
Speaker ASo smile.
Speaker ASay good morning.
Speaker AThey're in your movie.
Speaker AIt's part of it.
Speaker BLove it.
Speaker BSo, Monique, oh, my goodness.
Speaker BYour perspective.
Speaker BI think that that's why so many people gravitate towards you.
Speaker BYour perspective is so awesome.
Speaker BWhere do people find you?
Speaker BI mean, you're traveling all over.
Speaker BI know you go on CRU cruise ships and everything else, but where can people find you to actually see you live?
Speaker AWell, this year, because of all of the good things, I actually have a pa.
Speaker AIt's like, what?
Speaker AI have a person to help me.
Speaker ASo I have a website, moniquemarvez.com.
Speaker Awe're constantly updating my tour dates.
Speaker AI have oniqueMarvez on all socials because there's only one Monique Marvez, and that's a true fact.
Speaker AI have a girlfriend, a cousin named Gianna.
Speaker AMonique Marvez.
Speaker AShe's kind of a poser, Copied my name.
Speaker ABut Monique Marvez on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, oniqueMarvez official fan page on Facebook, because actually, my personal page is maxed out.
Speaker AAnd then my website, moniquemarvez.com and that has tour dates, and you can contact me through it and et cetera, et cetera.
Speaker BI highly recommend people come see you.
Speaker CI sure hope I can go see you.
Speaker CYeah, I want to.
Speaker BSo, Monique, with your perspective, you understand the importance of laughter and humor.
Speaker BAnd, I mean, you really have it all together in terms of, I think, understanding.
Speaker BLike you said, the Matrix.
Speaker BThe matrix of life.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker BYes.
Speaker BWhat would you say is a takeaway for people in terms of laughter and maybe how they can feel better?
Speaker BBecause I think they're really craving that right now.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AHere's what I learned this year.
Speaker AWhen I said earlier, this was the best year of my life.
Speaker AI have always thought if you look at life as a game, like a video game, and you game it.
Speaker AGoing back to the Matrix analogy, why is this in your movie?
Speaker AWhat's the opportunity?
Speaker AWhat can come from this?
Speaker AThat is good.
Speaker AAnd again, I'm not a hypocrite.
Speaker AI'm not telling you to do something I haven't done.
Speaker AWhen my brother died, My brother died Suddenly, July of 2021.
Speaker AI was bereft.
Speaker AThere are no words to describe.
Speaker AWe were very, very close.
Speaker AExtremely close.
Speaker AAnd you know, you can't.
Speaker AYou know, you expect to bury your parents and nobody wants to, and some people have to do it too soon, but it's kind of baked in.
Speaker AWe know that's coming.
Speaker AOr pets.
Speaker ANobody expects to bury a younger sibling.
Speaker ASo the reason I'm saying game, it Is again, not being a hypocrite.
Speaker AWhen my brother died, after I got over the shock and I could think a little more clearly, I thought, what could be the opportunity from this?
Speaker AAnd I think even just changing my brain a little bit, all of a sudden, my career started to explode.
Speaker AAnd I regularly would say out loud, I think my brother died, went to heaven, and became my agent.
Speaker AAnd then things just kept happening, and I kept believing that and saying it out loud.
Speaker AAnd then what I now, when people ask, I tell them my brother's death was the gift that kept on giving.
Speaker ABecause my mantra became, life is short, death is sure.
Speaker AAnd it doesn't make me sad.
Speaker AIt actually empowers me and makes me double down on the joy.
Speaker AIt makes me feel very much.
Speaker ARemember, you know what?
Speaker AI'm here with friends and, you know, they've ordered dessert and yeah, you know, I like my clothes to fit me loose.
Speaker ABut I'm here and I'm having fun and I love them, and life is short and death is sure.
Speaker ASo I'm going to order the key lime pie and I'll just do a little more yoga.
Speaker AI mean, I don't do it every day, but when I'm in a moment and I'm like, this is magical or this is special or this is, you know, yes, yes.
Speaker AWhich is way different from, I'm miserable and I have a frozen Pepperidge farm in my freezer, because I've done that, too.
Speaker ABut being an annual passholder Disney pass holder, it's not cheap.
Speaker AI'm not rich.
Speaker ABut guess what?
Speaker AKnowing that I'm going to go to Disney once or twice a month because I have a friend, and we agreed, we made a pact to get annual pass holders together.
Speaker AAnd just knowing that twice a month I'm going to go with my bestie that I love and laugh and ride rides is just game it.
Speaker AJust game it.
Speaker AWhy is this in your movie?
Speaker AWhat's the challenge?
Speaker AWhat's the win?
Speaker AOn the other side of the challenge, what's the win?
Speaker AI don't even tell people.
Speaker AIf I have a problem, I go, I have a challenge.
Speaker ABecause I even use game it verbiage.
Speaker BThat's a powerful perspective, Monique.
Speaker BAnd that's definitely something that people need to think about, know what's valuable, know what really, really is important in life.
Speaker BAnd I think that that's what you're doing.
Speaker BYou're bringing people around to think about that.
Speaker CReally sorry to hear about your brother.
Speaker CThat's my.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker BSuch a hard loss.
Speaker AIt was.
Speaker ABut again, I game it meaning what's good?
Speaker AIt's a roller coaster.
Speaker AIt's going to get better.
Speaker AAnd when it does, throw your hands in the air and scream, game it.
Speaker CYeah, I like that.
Speaker AGame it.
Speaker BI do, too.
Speaker BMonique, where do people find you again?
Speaker AOniqueMarvez on all social media.
Speaker AIf you want to interact with me at Monique Marvez official fan page on Facebook, because the other one's maxed out.
Speaker AMy personal page, moniquemarvez.com is my website and I'm constantly updating everything on there.
Speaker BThank you so much for being back on our show.
Speaker BWe just love your perspectives.
Speaker AYou girls not only bring me joy, but as things were exploding under my feet, you were the first people, and I've heard it many times since, you were the first people that say young women need to hear what you have to say.
Speaker AYou need to be the Taylor Swift of comedy.
Speaker AAnd when you guys said that, it struck me in the sternum.
Speaker AIt just made me feel so powerful and so joyful that you guys were saying lots and lots and lots of young women.
Speaker AYou know, I'd like everybody to think I'm terrific, but if I can help a young woman have a better, happier life, that's the win for me.
Speaker BAmen.
Speaker BWell, we're glad to say that, Monique, because we believe that you're awesome.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AI feel the sun.
Speaker AThank you.
Speaker AI feel the same about you girls.
Speaker ATrust me, I do.
Speaker BYou rock, too.
Speaker BThank you, Monique.
Speaker BWe hope you've enjoyed this latest episode.
Speaker BAnd if you want to hear more episodes of Women Road warriors or learn more about our show, be sure to check out womenroadwarriors.com and please follow us on social media.
Speaker BAnd don't forget to subscribe to our podcast on our website.
Speaker BWe also have a selection of podcasts just for women.
Speaker BThey're a series of podcasts from different podcasters.
Speaker BSo if you're in the mood for women's podcasts, just click the Power network tab on womenroadwarriors.com youm'll have a variety of shows to listen to anytime you want to.
Speaker BPodcasts Made for Women Women Road warriors is on all the major podcast channels like Apple, Spotify, Amazon, Audible, YouTube and others.
Speaker BCheck us out and please follow us wherever you listen to podcasts.
Speaker BThanks for listening.
Speaker AYou've been listening to Women Road warriors with Shelly Johnson and Kathy Tuccaro.
Speaker AIf you want to be a guest on the show or have a talk topic or feedback, email us@sjohnsonomenroadwarriors.com.